JAMES SOMERVILLE (CANADIAN POLITICIAN, BRUCE)
'James Somerville' (January 31 1826 – September 19 1898) was an Ontario businessman, notary public and political figure. He represented Bruce West in the Canadian House of Commons as a Liberal member from 1882 to 1887.
He was born in Dunfermline, Fifeshire, Scotland in 1826 and came to Dundas, Upper Canada with his family in 1841. In 1849, he married Mary Bennett. He was named a magistrate in 1854. He founded the village of Lucknow, where he bought a sawmill and erected a gristmill and wool carding mill. He also helped organize a petition to have Lucknow incorporated as a police village in 1863 and donated the land for the town hall. Somerville also served on the township councils for Wawanosh and Kinloss and was commissioner in the Court of Queen's Bench. He was First Principal in the Royal Arch chapter of Freemasons.
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| External links |
External links
★ ''The Canadian parliamentary companion, 1885'', JA Gemmill
★ Synopsis of federal political experience from the Library of Parliament
★ ''The History of the County of Bruce ...'', N Robertson (date unknown)
★ ''The Canadian biographical dictionary and portrait gallery of eminent and self-made men : Ontario volume'' (1880)
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